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South Africa Receives Dual Financial Boost for Infrastructure from AfDB and World Bank

SA-PResident South Africa Receives Dual Financial Boost for Infrastructure from AfDB and World Bank

South Africa has secured another significant injection of international funding, with the African Development Bank (AfDB) today approving a 474.6 million U.S. dollar loan to upgrade the country’s critical transport and energy infrastructure. This marks the second major infrastructure loan South Africa has been promised in recent weeks, underscoring concerted efforts to revitalize its economy.

The AfDB’s Board of Directors endorsed the loan as part of South Africa’s Infrastructure Governance and Green Growth Programme (IGGGP). According to the AfDB, this financing is designed to accelerate the country’s transition toward a sustainable, low-carbon economy, enhance energy security, support a just energy transition, and improve transport efficiency.

This latest financial support follows a substantial 1.5 billion U.S. dollar loan that South Africa agreed with the World Bank last month (June 2025) for a similar purpose. That World Bank loan aimed to support structural reforms to improve energy security and freight transport efficiency, which have been significant bottlenecks to economic growth.

For more than a decade, South Africa, Africa’s most industrialized economy, has grappled with severe infrastructure challenges, including persistent power blackouts (load shedding), crumbling rail networks, and chronically congested ports. These issues have severely hampered key sectors such as mining and automotive manufacturing.

Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana lauded the AfDB’s support, stating, “Our country faces the significant challenge of energy shortages, leading to loadshedding, as well as significant transport bottlenecks, which have been detrimental to growing our economy and achieving our developmental aspirations. With your partnership, our government has committed itself to stay the course and implement these critical reforms.”

The combined backing from the AfDB and World Bank underscores international confidence in South Africa’s reform agenda and its potential to unlock economic growth by addressing fundamental infrastructure deficits.

By: TPA News Desk | editor@thepointafricanews.com

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